Wilfrids words: You can tell her family Im going away, and Dinnys: Its finished, had travelled, if not like wildfire, throughout the Cherrell family. There was no rejoicing as over a sinner that repenteth. All were too sorry for her, with a sorrow nigh unto dismay. Each wanted to show sympathy, none knew how. Sympathy smelling of sympathy was worse than none. Three days passed, during which not one member of the family succeeded in expressing anything. Then Adrian had a brainwave: He would ask her to eat something with him, though why food should be regarded as consolatory neither he nor anyone else had ever known. He appointed a café which had perhaps more repute than merit.
Since Dinny was not of those young women who make the ravages of life into an excuse for French-varnishing their surfaces, he had every opportunity to note her pallor. He forbore to comment. Indeed, he found it difficult to talk at all, for he knew that, though men, when enthralled by women, remain devoted to their mental mainsprings, women, less bodily enthralled, stay mentally wrapped up in the men they love. He began, however, to tell her how someone had tried to sell him a pup.
He wanted five hundred pounds, Dinny, for a Cromagnon skull found in Suffolk. The whole thing looked extraordinarily genuine. But I happened to see the county archaeologist. Oh! he said: So hes been trying to palm that off on you, has he? Thats the well-known pup. Hes dug it up at least three times. The man ought to be in gaol. He keeps it in a cupboard and every five or six years digs a hole, puts it in, takes it out, and tries to sell it. It possibly is a Cromagnon skull, but he picked it up in France, about twenty years ago. It would be unique, of course as a British product. Thereon I went off to have another look at where it was found last time. And it was plain enough, when you already knew it, that hed put the thing in. Theres something about antiques that saps what the Americans call ones moral.
What sort of man was he, uncle?
An enthusiastic-looking chap, rather like my hairdresser.
Dinny laughed. You ought to do something, or he will sell it next time.
The depression is against him, my dear. Bones and first editions are extraordinarily sensitive. Hell have to live a good ten years to get anything like a price.
Do many people try to palm things off on you?
Some succeed, Dinny. I regret that pup, though; it was a lovely skull. There arent many as good nowadays.
We English certainly are getting uglier.
Dont you believe it. Put the people we meet in drawing-rooms and shops into cassocks and cowls, armour and jerkins, and youll have just the faces of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries.
But we do despise beauty, Uncle. We connect it with softness and immorality.
Well, it makes people happy to despise what they havent got. Were only about the third no, the fourth plainest people in Europe. But take away the Celtic infusions, and I admit wed be the first.
Dinny looked round the café. Her survey added nothing to her conclusions, partly because she took but little in, and partly because the lunchers were nearly all Jews or Americans.
Adrian watched her with an ache. She looked so bone-listless.
Huberts gone, then? he said.
Yes.
And what are you going to do, my dear?
Dinny sat looking at her plate. Suddenly she raised her head and said:
I think I shall go abroad, Uncle.
Adrians hand went to his goatee.
I see, he said, at last. Money?
I have enough.
Where?
Anywhere.
By yourself?
Dinny nodded.
The drawback to going away, murmured Adrian, is the having to come back.
There doesnt seem to be anything much for me to do just now. So I think Ill cheer people up by not seeing them for a bit.
Adrian debated within himself.
Well, my dear, only you can decide whats best for you. But if you felt like a long travel, it strikes me that Clare might be glad to see you in Ceylon.
Seeing by the surprised movement of her hands that the idea was new to her, he went on:
I have a feeling that she may not be finding life very easy.
Her eyes met his.
Thats what I thought at the wedding, Uncle; I didnt like his face.
You have a special gift for helping others, Dinny; and whatevers wrong about Christianity, its not the saying To give is more blessed than to receive.
Even the Son of Man liked His little joke, Uncle.
Adrian looked at her hard, and said:
Well, if you do go to Ceylon, mind you eat your mangoes over a basin.
He parted from her a little later and, too much out of mood to go back to work, went to the Horse Show instead.
![]() | ![]() | ![]() |